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Leggo My Viggo
FROM:Jane Magazine 1998
Forty-year old actor, poet, painter and photographer Viggo Mortensen can be
kind of overwhelming. After all, it's not every day you get to meet a real-life
Renaissance man. Viggo you may remember, played the sadistic Navy SEAL
who got his butt whipped by Demi Moore in G.I. Jane. He was last seen in A
Perfect Murder, with Gwyneth Paltrow (yep, those were Viggo's paintings in
the movie.) Right now he's trying to find out who wears the pants in the
Bates family, in Psycho; and in April, he'll play a blouse-selling hippie in A Walk
on the Moon.
Whatever he is, whatever he's filming, Viggo's contract states that he has to
be home in Venice, Calif., for Halloween so he can go trick-or-treating with his
11-year-old son Henry(the product of Viggo's brief marriage to my punk idol,
Exene Cervenka of X). Of all the things there are to admire about Viggo, this
is definitely the game point.
I read somewhere that you had the best walk.
What's that about?
Really? (Laughs) I don't know. How do you they know?
I guess people are standing behind you.
Yeah ... watching me walk. What's a good walk? I stay in a straight line, I
think. That's a good thing to aim for.
You've done 30 movies, and people still think you're a new face. Is that good
or bad?
"That's kind of a double-edged sword. In terms of people not being tired of
you, it's a good thing. In terms of people saying you have yet to prove
yourself, or being forced to do two movies in a year away from home, that
can be a lot if you have a life outside of that-whether it's family or other
interests.
"
And you sure have a lot of them. You were born in Manhattan, yes?
"Yeah, but we moved all over the place-Venezuela, Argentina, Denmark. I still
have a taste for it,traveling. And I am good at making myself at home quickly
wherever I am. I don't know if I'm as good as like, going into a social
gathering and starting to talk, but I could spend days by myself.
"
When did you start painting, poetry and photography?
"Somewhere along the way. According to my mother, I never was anywhere
without a pencil, drawing. She recently gave me a notebook filled with my old
drawings, and there's one from when I was 7 that was wild. All the others
were pretty regular, like swords, guns, planes crashing, pee-pees ... And then
there was this school assignment. At the top of the page, it said, "Little Red
Riding Hood." It was a real painting-the colors were blended, and it was kind
of abstract, but I really liked it. Anyway written over the drawing in red pen
was VERY POOR! Underlined. Teachers used to do that thinking it was
constructive.
"
Ouch. But you showed her, because you just had your first gallery showing.
Is it hard putting a price on your art?
There's a woman at the gallery who helped me with it. When it's just you, you
may be having a bad day and look at something you made, and go, "God!"
But someone else will see something different. A couple of days ago, l looked
at all the paintings, and I was like, "I don't know what these are." Then it
snowballed. "What kind of actor am I anyway? What kind of father? I mean,
what a joke. God, I'm such a vain, self-involved creature, and I should just
stop making these things and inflicting them on people!" I can see why people
jump out windows.
Wow. Is this a good time to ask how you feel about being called a
Renaissance man?
I haven't been called that. I have been asked how I find the time to do all this
stuff.
Let me guess: no TV-watching.
That's right. My son gets annoyed because there are cartoons that he feels
are a matter of life and death. But he sees some of that stuff at his friends'
houses, and we rent a lot of movies. I think later on he'll be happy about it.
And he reads a lot- at least he's using his imagination rather than just sitting
passively. But Henry's always been able to spend hours entertaining himself.
He's great. You could be in the same room with him but he's totally in his own
world .... I don't know what I'd do without him.
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